Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!sdd.hp.com!ucsd!nosc!cod!zimmer From: zimmer@cod.NOSC.MIL (Thomas L. Zimmerman) Newsgroups: comp.unix.aux Subject: Re: mounting drives Message-ID: <2000@cod.NOSC.MIL> Date: 17 Jul 90 20:14:28 GMT References: <15690002@hpdmd48boi.hp.com> Organization: Naval Ocean Systems Center, San Diego Lines: 49 > > If anyone can shed some light (or better yet, offer some solutions) > to either of these problems, I'd love to hear about it. > OK, first, yes A/UX 2.0 can deal with non-Apple drives and yes, it does only mount one HFS partition - no matter how many there are on the drive. I have a 650M HP as my external drive with A/UX running off my internal HD80. I originally had several mac partitions on the external driv - which had been formatted and partitioned using Silverlining. Making all the HFS partitions mount on startup resulted in their being there under the minimal mac os when it started but then all but one went away when A/UX was launched. I even tried installing the SilverLining mount controller DA, got it running under A/UX and then mounted the other partitions - what I ended up with was several copies of the same disk partition! Conversation with Apple reps verified that A/UX will only mount the single HFS partition per physical drive. If you use Silverlining it is fairly trivial to alternately copy files to the one partition you want, shrink the other partitions, expand the one your keeping in a repeat loop until all your files are on the one partition and then delete the others. I have been running for over a week now with a 320M HFS partition and have have no problems. Now, I've got a question. Alert readers will note that I have used only half of my 650M disk. The other half was set up, using Silverlining as a "UNIX_SVR2;Random" partition. Anyone out there have any clue what slice of the disk this is so I can make a file system and mount it? A final comment. I also have the 1.2G of disk on my Sun workstation mounted using NFS to the Mac. It has not really hit me just how impressive the A/UX Finder interface is for doing "real" UNIX stuff until yesterday. I was going through the several megabytes of net notes and source code I have collected in the last few months. But, rather than doing a lot of typing of descriptive (but long) filenames, I was double clicking on unix text file icons, transparently bringing up Textedit to view and edit them. I was dragging files from folder to folder to place them where they made sense - sometimes on the mac file system and sometimes on the UNIX one (no more rcp and ftp). I was dropping UNIX files in the trash and they went away. I even had a running count of the the amount of used/free disk space at the top of my Finder window - so I could see what a good job I was doing of freeing up space - without regularly resorting to 'df'. Reading this it may not sound like much, but to someone who could both appreciate it from the transparent ease of use and who had some idea of all the technical magic going on in the background to make it that easy it was impressive. Well done Apple! -- Lee Zimmerman, Naval Ocean Systems Center, Code 421, San Diego, CA, 92152 {arpa,mil}net: zimmer@nosc.mil uucp: {ihnp4,akgua,decvax,dcdwest,ucbvax}!sdcsvax!nosc!zimmer